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Professors Fear Impact of DeepSeek ‘Censorship’ on Students’ Work
China’s rapidly growing AI tool brushes off questions about Tiananmen Square and spouts the Communist Party line on sensitive topics like Taiwan.

Listen: Increasing Access, Equity in Study Abroad Participation
A new initiative at Bucknell University seeks to bridge participation gaps between first-generation, low-income students and their peers in terms of who’s participating in study away global education.
Student Visa Numbers Hit Record Despite Australian Clampdown
New figures suggest political headache for government—and educators—will not disappear any time soon.

As Data Goes Off-Line Under Trump, Environmental Researchers Are Uploading Backups
A team of scholars has worked since November to archive resources that are valuable to themselves and the public—just in case they were taken down.
The Benefits of Citizen Science and Community-Engaged Research
Two leading academics explain why everyone benefits when researchers look beyond academia to seek greater understanding and new knowledge alongside the broader public or affected communities.
Amy Wax Sues, Accuses Penn of Racial Double Standard for Speech About Black, Jewish People

Historians’ Council Vetoes Gaza Scholasticide Condemnation
American Historical Association convention-goers overwhelmingly passed the statement on Jan. 5, but the group’s top elected body has vetoed it without letting all AHA members vote.

Laken Riley Act Could Have Implications for Higher Ed
The bill would force harsher detention policies and could impact visas for lawful, documented individuals applying to work or study in the States.
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